In the field of industrial automation and precision measurement, non-contact displacement sensing technology has become the core means of quality inspection, positioning control, and morphology analysis. The Z4M series laser displacement sensor demonstrates excellent adaptability in many applications with its highest resolution of 1.5 microns, ± 4V analog output, and detection distance of up to 140 millimeters. However, to fully unleash the performance potential of this sensor, engineers not only need to understand its basic specifications, but also must master the technical details of the entire process from installation alignment, sensitivity matching to output calibration and fault diagnosis. This article is based on practical engineering requirements, systematically summarizing the core characteristics and operating points of Z4M series sensors, providing reproducible configuration solutions and problem-solving ideas, and helping users build stable and high-precision displacement measurement systems.
Sensor selection and core specification analysis
The Z4M series includes two main models: Z4M-W40 and Z4M-W100. The core difference between the two lies in the trade-off between measurement range and corresponding resolution response speed.
1.1 Measurement Range and Accuracy Parameters
Z4M-W40 has a nominal measurement point of 40mm and provides a measurement range of ± 10mm (i.e. between 30mm and 50mm). Within this range, users can obtain three resolutions by switching response times: when the response time is set to 60 milliseconds, the resolution can reach up to 1.5 micrometers; Switch to a 2-millisecond response with a resolution of 10 microns; In the 0.15 millisecond fast response mode, the resolution is 40 microns. This hierarchical design enables the same sensor to adapt to diverse needs ranging from static geometric dimension measurement to high-speed vibration analysis.
Z4M-W100 extends the nominal measurement point to 100 millimeters, with a measurement range of ± 40 millimeters (60 millimeters to 140 millimeters). The corresponding relationship between resolution and response time is: resolution of 8 microns at 500 milliseconds response, 30 microns at 20 milliseconds response, and 150 microns at 0.7 milliseconds response. It is worth noting that the beam divergence effect caused by a longer measurement range leads to an increase in the spot size - at a distance of 100 millimeters, the spot size is about 1.4 millimeters by 0.7 millimeters. Therefore, for the detection of small feature targets, Z4M-W40 should be given priority consideration.
1.2 Linearity and Temperature Stability
The linearity indicators of the two models are 1% (Z4M-W40) and 1.5% (Z4M-W100) of full scale, respectively. The full range here is defined as a distance of 20 millimeters (corresponding to ± 10 millimeters) from the full range, and a voltage full range of 8V (from -4V to+4V). Therefore, the maximum linear error of Z4M-W40 is 0.2 millimeters or 80 millivolts. It should be noted that the linearity test uses white alumina ceramic as the standard target. In actual testing, if the target material, color, or surface roughness changes, the linearity error curve may deviate.
In terms of temperature characteristics, the overall drift of the sensor and amplifier is 0.03% FS/° C. Taking Z4M-W40 as an example, each degree Celsius temperature change introduces a distance drift of about 6 microns (20mm × 0.0003) or a voltage drift of 2.4 millivolts. For applications that require micrometer level accuracy, it is recommended to use or implement temperature compensation algorithms in a constant temperature environment.
1.3 Laser safety level and spot characteristics
The sensor uses an infrared semiconductor laser with a wavelength of 780 nanometers and a maximum output power of 3 milliwatts, which meets the 3B level requirements of the IEC 60825-1 standard and the IIIb level requirements of the FDA. The spot size is defined as the boundary at 1/e ² (13.5%) of the center intensity of the laser beam. The spot diameter of Z4M-W40 at the nominal measurement point of 40mm is approximately 0.6mm; The spot size of Z4M-W100 at 100 millimeters is 1.4 millimeters by 0.7 millimeters. There is still stray light beyond this boundary, which may cause measurement errors when there is a high reflection background around the measured object.
System installation and mechanical alignment
2.1 Matching constraints between sensors and amplifiers
At the factory, the sensor and amplifier are used as paired units for joint calibration, and they have the same serial number. It is strictly prohibited to mix sensors and amplifiers with different serial numbers, otherwise the linear output will fail. During system maintenance or spare parts replacement, paired components must be replaced simultaneously.
2.2 Installation position and indicator alignment method
The sensor body adopts an aluminum die-casting shell with a protection level of IP40 and a weight of approximately 180 grams (including a 2-meter cable). The amplifier housing is made of ABS material and weighs approximately 200 grams. During installation, ensure that the optical window at the front end of the sensor is clean to avoid oil and dust adhesion.